Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 1 This script adapted from Regular Guy/km, 2007 Characters (in order of appearance): BUZZ GUY NARRATOR ONE NARRATOR TWO BUZZ: What s with the golfers? GUY: My mother thinks it s a manly sport and since I m her little man NARRATOR ONE: I trailed off as if that was enough explanation. BUZZ: When did she do it? GUY: Last night, after I went to sleep. NARRATOR TWO: We were discussing my lunch box. The day before it had been an ordinary red plastic box with my name written on it in black Magic Marker. NARRATOR ONE: But my mother had been visited by one of her frequent creative urges and had decoupaged a bunch of pictures of golfers and golf equipment all over it. BUZZ: Who s that guy up by the handle? GUY: Lee Travino. BUZZ: Who s he? GUY: Manly golfer, I guess. NARRATOR TWO: We snapped open our lunch boxes and flipped back the lids.
Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 2 NARRATOR ONE: I looked longingly at Buzz s peanut butter and jelly sandwich. GUY: Want to trade? BUZZ: Whatcha got? GUY: One raw hot dog, three grape kebobs, couple garlic twists, and an apricot nectar. BUZZ: Sheesh! NARRATOR TWO: Buzz turned away and took a bite of his sandwich. NARRATOR ONE: He ended up taking pity on me and giving me half of his sandwich, which I washed down with the apricot nectar. BUZZ: Any progress in the search for your roots? GUY: No, not yet. But I m working on it. NARRATOR TWO: Buzz was talking about the conversation we had yesterday. I am nothing like my parents, and I was beginning to believe that I was involved in one of those hospital mix-ups where they give the wrong baby to the wrong mother. NARRATOR ONE: We headed out to the playground where we normally spend the second half of our lunch period. BUZZ: I ve been thinking about that switched at birth thing some more. The way I see it is if that happened, whoever you got switched with would have to be exactly the same age as you, right? GUY: Yeah, so?
Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 3 BUZZ: Well, if they moved away, you re pretty much sunk, because it s very hard to track down people who traipse all over the world, especially if you don t even know their names. If they didn t move, though, couldn t that kid who s living with your real parents be right here under your nose? GUY: You mean at school? BUZZ: Yeah, he d be in the sixth grade, just like you, right? GUY: You know, you could be on to something there, Buzz. BUZZ: Your birthday s July fourteenth, right? GUY: Uh huh. BUZZ: Well, I happen to know that there s a file in the office that has all that sort of stuff. You know birthdays, addresses, allergies, and junk for every sixth grader in the school. All we have to do is take a look in there and see if anybody else has a birthday right around yours. GUY: How are we going to get in to the file? BUZZ: We gotta get detention. GUY: Detention? NARRATOR TWO: My voice cracked on the word. GUY: I ve never been sent down to the office for anything in my life! I m a major do-gooder, and I can t remember a teacher ever even looking at me sideways, let alone sending me down for detention! BUZZ: We ve got to do something bad enough to get us both sent down to the office. That way one of us can search the file while the other one distracts old Mrs. Dipnower.
Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 4 NARRATOR ONE: The bell rang, and I went inside to French class. Buzz was taking Spanish, so I knew there was no point in trying to misbehave when I couldn t be assured that he d get sent downstairs, too. NARRATOR TWO: Next was a double period of Humanities. Buzz was already in his seat when I got there. He gave me a look like BUZZ: (softly) Get ready. NARRATOR ONE: I took my place across the table from him. NARRATOR TWO: My teacher, Mr. Glass, really likes me. He s always reading my papers out loud to show how well I follow directions, and on the big homework chart I m the only one who has check-pluses after every assignment. NARRATOR ONE: We were studying Greek myths, so Mr. Glass started reading to us from The Odyssey. I was watching Melanie Mason doodle in the margins of her notebook. Meanwhile, Mr. Glass was up to the part about the one-eyed monster and the soldiers hiding underneath the sheep. GUY: (softly) Ow! NARRATOR TWO: I felt Buzz kick me hard under the table. Looking up, I saw him tapping his pencil rapidly on the top of his paper. Written upside down so I could read it was BUZZ: I HAVE A PLAN. GUY: (whispering) What is it? NARRATOR ONE: I mouthed.
Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 5 NARRATOR TWO: He wrote and then tapped the message again, more insistently this time. BUZZ: (softly) FOLLOW MY LEAD NARRATOR ONE: For a second, I thought maybe this was the extent of Buzz s big plan, detention for table tapping. I waited nervously for my next instructions. GUY: (softly) That s your brilliant plan? NARRATOR TWO: I was supposed to pretend to punch Buzz in the nose. He had pinched a package of ketchup from the lunchroom and filled his hand with it. NARRATOR ONE: After I hit him he would smear the ketchup under his nose and off we d go to detention for roughhousing. NARRATOR TWO: Well, what happened was that I couldn t seem to find the right moment to fake my punch. Buzz got antsy and tried to grab my hand and make me hit him, but his sleeve got caught on his binder ring and the ketchup squirted out all over Melanie s notebook, which sent her completely around the twist. NARRATOR ONE: It worked out all right because I let her copy my notes while Buzz and I got sent down to the office for the second half of the period. NARRATOR TWO: Once we were down there on the detention bench, Buzz whispered, BUZZ: (whispering) What do you want to do, snoop or distract?
Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 6 GUY: (softly) Snoop, I guess. Go over to Mrs. Dipnower s desk and get her attention. NARRATOR ONE: So Buzz sidled over to Mrs. Dipnower s desk to distract her while I slid down the bench toward the tall green file cabinets. BUZZ: (with southern accent) You know, Mrs. Dipnower, that brown dress you re wearing puts me in mind of the exact color of the cattails my mama and I used to pull down in Louisiana when I was little. NARRATOR TWO: I had to hold back my laughter. GUY: (quietly) Boy, he s really laying his southern accent on something fierce! NARRATOR ONE: The words were dripping out of Buzz s mouth like honey and twanging around the room like old guitar strings, and much to my amazement, it seemed to be working. BUZZ: That color is a kissin cousin to the shade of those cattails we used to pick when Mama took a mind to making her famous tickly-stick stew with a biscuit to dunk in it and a couple of deep-fat-fried crawdads chunked on top for crunch. NARRATOR TWO: I happen to know that Buzz s mom cooks regular stuff like macaroni and cheese and meatloaf, but Buzz s story was buying me plenty of time to slip off the bench and snag the sixth-grade records file out of the bottom drawer. GUY: (softly) I got it! NARRATOR ONE: I slipped it into my binder and eased back onto the bench.
Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 7 NARRATOR TWO: While Buzz launched into some ridiculous tall tale about his grandpappy getting a gator baby tangled up in his long johns, I flipped through the pages until I found what I wanted. Or anyway, what I was looking for. NARRATOR ONE: When I managed to stick the file back in the drawer I signaled Buzz that our mission was accomplished GUY: Hey Buzz! NARRATOR ONE: He cut his story short by slapping his knee and laughing like a fool. NARRATOR TWO: Mrs. Dipnower was eating it up with a spoon, and I think she may have been disappointed when Buzz came back and joined me on the bench. NARRATOR ONE: He whispered. BUZZ: (whispering) Did you get it? NARRATOR TWO: I nodded. BUZZ: What s the matter, Guy? You look like you saw a ghost. GUY: Look at this! NARRATOR ONE: I handed him the sheet of paper on which I d written the name of the one sixth grader who shared my birthday. BUZZ: Holy crow! NARRATOR TWO: Just then the bell for the final period rang and Mrs. Dipnower released us from our detention with a finger wagging and a wink.
Regular Guy by Sarah Weeks 8 NARRATOR ONE: I was numb as we walked down the hall to the science lab. NARRATOR TWO: Things were starting to make sense, but I wasn t at all sure how I felt about it.